Super User king fisher Posted September 15, 2022 Super User Posted September 15, 2022 I prefer the cover, I loose the most lures on. That also seems to be the cover where I catch the biggest bass. Recently that has been flooded barbed wire fences. Sometimes the bigger the risks, the bigger the reward. 3 Quote
Super User Choporoz Posted September 15, 2022 Super User Posted September 15, 2022 Wood. All day every day. Offshore brushpiles, especially, since they get overlooked by most. I love laydowns, too. I've transitioned to more better attention to crowns of laydowns this year. Or, at least made a conscious effort to fish them better. I spent many years positioning over good fish and casting to trunks and main limbs without giving myself a good shot at some prime tree parts. Another wood that I've given recent attention to is logs randomly scattered on the bottom. Amazing what fish you will find sitting alongside a small log in middle of otherwise rather smooth area. Years with sidescan and I still feel like a newb with it sometimes. I can't pass a dock without skipping something under it....and I live in a region with great pads and hydrilla....but wood is where I'm most comfortable 4 Quote
Super User Darth-Baiter Posted September 15, 2022 Super User Posted September 15, 2022 Grass, grass or bass. Quote
Super User MN Fisher Posted September 15, 2022 Super User Posted September 15, 2022 We don't have much, if any, laydowns in Tonka - so lily pads, hydrilla, coontail, pondweed and milfoil are the cover of choice here Quote
papajoe222 Posted September 16, 2022 Posted September 16, 2022 It depends on what form of cover is available in the body of water you're targeting. If there are weeds, the edges (inside, outside and top) are good places to start. Another is where one type of weed stops growing, or another begins growing with it. So, any change in the weeds is a prime target. With rip-rap, anywhere the size of the rocks changes, or the depth where they end is a good place to target. On some lakes, that area is also where weeds begin and is an excellent place. Structure itself can be a holding area for LM. Drop offs, ridges, creek channels etc. and if there is any form of cover there, all the better. For wood, I'm clueless as 95% of the lakes I fish are natural lakes with very little timber if any. 2 Quote
Phelptwan Posted September 16, 2022 Posted September 16, 2022 If a tree's in the water, I'm gonna fish it. Number 2 is always going to be docks, the older looking with big wood posts and narrow gapped boards the better. Quote
Super User Mobasser Posted September 16, 2022 Super User Posted September 16, 2022 Some other types of cover I like are overcast sky, light wind( chop on the surface), or light misting rain. Many times this happens at the same time. Quote
Super User T-Billy Posted September 16, 2022 Super User Posted September 16, 2022 Rock in spring, weeds/wood in summer, wood in fall, back to rock as fall turns to winter. As always there's exceptions, but this is a general guideline for me. Quote
Super User MIbassyaker Posted September 16, 2022 Super User Posted September 16, 2022 The vast majority of places I fish here are small natural lakes, where the largemouth are overwhelmingly sunfish-eaters. Vegetated areas have a lot of invertebrate and insect activity which draws the sunfish. And where ever there are sunfish, the bass will be hanging around too. Thus, I am always looking for particular kinds of vegetation in particular areas. -waterlilies, arrowheads, or reeds (bulrushes) near a drop off to deep water, or in water as deep as I can find them growing. -cabbage (clasping-leaf pondweed) on a flat or lining a slope, or where mixed with some other vegetation like coontail or watermilfoil -any shallow vegetation around a laydown -a deep weedline of any kind Quote
Bass Rutten Posted September 16, 2022 Posted September 16, 2022 Wow 2 pages in and not a single mention of docks, interesting, it’s pretty much the only cover in the natural lakes I fish. Someone mentioned grass earlier but I’m pretty sure that’s technically structure not cover, isn’t being part of the lake bottom the definition of structure? Quote
Super User MN Fisher Posted September 16, 2022 Super User Posted September 16, 2022 41 minutes ago, Bass Rutten said: Someone mentioned grass earlier but I’m pretty sure that’s technically structure not cover, isn’t being part of the lake bottom the definition of structure? Nope - if it's organic, it's cover. Rocks, hollows, trenches (river bottoms in reservoirs) are all part of the topography of the lake/river bed...that's structure. These things remain season to season virtually unchanged...you can go decades without structure changing unless it's human caused. Growing weeds, fallen trees - that's cover. These things change in much shorter time scale...weeds grow from spring to fall, then die back during winter while fallen trees rot away in a few years. All cover is 'temporary' even if it's recurring. 2 Quote
TriStateBassin106 Posted September 16, 2022 Posted September 16, 2022 Docks lilly pads, overhanging trees and parked boats. If I'm fishing the bank I like riprap, lilly pads trees etc. Quote
Super User Columbia Craw Posted September 16, 2022 Super User Posted September 16, 2022 Buck brush for largemouth and rock for smallmouth. Quote
Super User Catt Posted September 16, 2022 Super User Posted September 16, 2022 Your Go-To Largemouth Cover? Darkness ? 4 Quote
Super User Deleted account Posted September 16, 2022 Super User Posted September 16, 2022 N/A, wherever they happen to be. Quote
Global Moderator Mike L Posted September 16, 2022 Global Moderator Posted September 16, 2022 6 hours ago, MN Fisher said: Nope - if it's organic, it's cover. Rocks, hollows, trenches (river bottoms in reservoirs) are all part of the topography of the lake/river bed...that's structure. These things remain season to season virtually unchanged...you can go decades without structure changing unless it's human caused. Growing weeds, fallen trees - that's cover. These things change in much shorter time scale...weeds grow from spring to fall, then die back during winter while fallen trees rot away in a few years. All cover is 'temporary' even if it's recurring. Well Said…. Mike Quote
Super User J Francho Posted September 16, 2022 Super User Posted September 16, 2022 On 9/14/2022 at 8:45 PM, gimruis said: Defined weed lines or docks. Both are better with nearby proximity to deep water. This is my focus as well. I do love fishing downed wood, but there has to be some certain elements, like deeper water or weeds nearby. Timber itself isn't enough to draw a cast. Over the years, I've developed a feel for what's right, after making 1000's of useless casts. One thing to note when fishing timber: if it looks good, keep throwing at it. like 20-30 casts before giving up. Good timber most certainly holds fish. 1 Quote
Super User gim Posted September 16, 2022 Super User Posted September 16, 2022 37 minutes ago, J Francho said: I do love fishing downed wood We don't really have downed wood here as cover. I do see an occasional tree in a small river that I float in midsummer but in lakes there is virtually none. Docks that stick out further into slightly deeper water and are close to deep water get my attention every time. Quote
Super User J Francho Posted September 16, 2022 Super User Posted September 16, 2022 In a way, I guess I prioritize docks in a similar manner, and that same criteria of "into deeper water" counts for timber as well. some lakes up here have no timber, others are loaded. 1 Quote
Super User scaleface Posted September 16, 2022 Super User Posted September 16, 2022 One of my least favorite are docks . simply because I do not feel comfortable skipping a lead head jig around other peoples property . I really need to learn that skill better . I'll fish around the edges and in open slots but I dont like taking the chance of banging a lure off someones boat . Quote
InfantryMP Posted September 16, 2022 Posted September 16, 2022 I am going to have to go with pads and docks. I think you can get a really good bag just fishing pads either froggin, or punchin, but it is fun either way. Skipping docks is also extremely fun with a chatterbait or wacky worm. 1 Quote
Global Moderator TnRiver46 Posted September 16, 2022 Global Moderator Posted September 16, 2022 Tree, rock, dock, or grass 1 Quote
Super User roadwarrior Posted September 16, 2022 Super User Posted September 16, 2022 I like points, primary and secondary. Quote
Super User MN Fisher Posted September 16, 2022 Super User Posted September 16, 2022 1 minute ago, roadwarrior said: I like points, primary and secondary. But isn't that structure, Kent? Quote
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